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The Copa América Centenario (Portuguese: Copa América Centenário, French: Coupe Amérique Centennaire, English: Centennial Cup America; [2] [3] literally Centennial America Cup) was an international men's soccer tournament that was hosted by the United States in 2016.
Junior ice hockey 2012–2016 MnJHL/USPHL: Indiana Blizzard: Ice hockey 2010 All American Hockey League: Indiana Ice: Junior ice hockey 2004–2014 United States Hockey League: Indiana Invaders: Soccer 1998–2011 USL Premier Development League
The new team name was announced on April 15, 2016, [7] taken from the P-47 Thunderbolt fighter aircraft which was manufactured in Evansville during the Second World War. [8] Near the end of the first season, Mike Hall sold his portion of the team to VW Sports, LLC. [5] and Pete Xander was named the new general manager for the 2017–18 season. [9]
Centennial's boys' soccer team won its first-ever state championship in a thrilling victory, while Las Cruces' girls team were the runners-up.
On September 24, 2021, Indy Eleven announced the fielding of a team in the amateur USL W League as part of the league's inaugural season in 2022. The team was the 17th team to be announced for the amateur women's league. [37] The team hosted the league's first-ever match, defeating Kings Hammer FC 3–1. [38]
The 2023 Indiana high school girls soccer season is in the books.. Meet this year's ALL-USA Central Indiana girls soccer Super Team, honoring the best of the best from around the area. Players ...
The team practices at the Indy Fuel Tank, an indoor ice rink in Fishers, Indiana. [11] On February 23, 2024, Eva Hallman became the first female broadcaster for the team. She joined long-time Indy Fuel play-by-play Andrew Smith in the booth. On December 6, 2024, Indy opened the New Fishers Event Center in a loss to the Iowa Heartlanders, 4-3.
The 23 wins rank third all-time for wins in a season. In 1979, Indiana went 19–2–2 and posted the second-lowest GAA in NCAA history (0.25), as the Hoosiers blanked an NCAA record 78.3 percent (18 shutouts) of their opponents. During the 1983 and 1984 seasons, Yeagley's Indiana teams set an NCAA record by going unbeaten in 46 consecutive games.